Church Apps: 11 Need-To-Know Facts Before Investing In A Mobile App

Almost every day I see a church ask this question: “Should we build a church app?” Maybe a church asks this question in a public forum. Or maybe they send me a DM or email directly.

It’s a fair question.

Mobile apps can be incredibly powerful platforms. But before your church begins building an app, I think it’s important to take a look at the actual data and statistics concerning mobile apps.

Churches that succeed with digital media (and platforms like apps) generally do two things very well:

They make informed decisions based on data – they don’t just blindly follow the trends

They don’t try to do too much

Want to know whether or not your church should build an app?

Keep reading…

Free Bonus: Click here to download The Perfect Church Homepage Infographic – a complete visual breakdown of the essential elements that every church website homepage needs

Fact #1: Mobiles apps are expensive

Let’s begin this conversation by talking about the price of mobile apps and what you as a church should expect.

Here are some terrifying numbers on the cost of developing custom mobile apps:

A VDC survey of enterprise app developers found mobile apps to cost an average of $140,000 each1

A Clutch survey of app development companies indicated a median price of $171,450 per app2

A Kinvey survey of CIOs found the average price to be $270,000 per app3

Simply stated, if you’re in the market for building a custom app, at the very least you should expect to spend $100,000.

If your church wants a custom app, expect to spend at least $100,000

SIDE NOTE: Every conversation I’ve had with a developer confirms the research findings listed above. Custom apps are crazy expensive. If someone says they can build you a custom app for significantly less, be suspicious.

Now, it goes without saying that most churches could never afford a six-figure custom app. So you might be wondering, how are churches creating apps at all then?

Answer: Templates.

Here’s the bottom line: If you see a church with an app, that app was almost certainly created using a pre-made template.

Fact #2: Your church website should be able to do anything a church app can do

The average mobile app from a church app company costs between $75-$200/month.

This is a huge expense! Especially considering that the majority of churches have less than 100 people present in their weekend worship services.4

Look, I’m all for churches investing more money into their digital presence. In fact, I think it is absolutely necessary. But let me ask you this simple question: what can a templated app do that your church’s website cannot?

When a church decides they want a mobile app there is usually one primary factor driving this decision: their website isn’t doing its job

For the longest time, mobile apps could perform functions that most websites couldn’t, but in recent years web coding languages have progressed and this is no longer the case.

Below you’ll find a comparison list between a church app and a modern website builder. Both platforms cost similar amounts. Both are template based.

My church app is built mobile-first! So is the website.

My church app allows my congregation to take message notes during the sermon! So does the website.

My church app allows my congregation to register for events and ministries! So does the website.

My church app integrates directly with my church management system! So does the website.

My church app has giving built directly into it! So does the website.

My church app dynamically displays video, audio, and blog content! So does the website.

When a church website does its job, it can do everything a mobile app can do – and more. Knowing this, why would your church pay for two different platforms that are both doing the exact same thing? It just isn’t prudent.

Quick Tip: Convincing your church to download an app is hard. Even then, 80% of downloaders fail to become active users (Source: Quettra).

These numbers point toward an important trend: mobile apps are beginning to decline.

Ten years ago Apple announced the release of the iPhone and the App Store. Since that time, mobile apps have risen to being the single most important source of digital media in our lives.

But that trend is beginning to curb. We’re downloading fewer apps than ever. We’re using fewer apps than ever. You might say that all the gold has already been discovered. The gold rush is over.

Free Bonus: Click here to download The Perfect Church Homepage Infographic – a complete visual breakdown of the essential elements that every church website homepage needs

Fact #6: App discovery is down across several channels, including the app store

According to comScore’s 2017 report, app discovery through the app stores, word-of-mouth, and advertising all saw a decline compared to their numbers in 2016.

This across-the-board decline lead comScore to ask the question in their report: “Is interest in new apps waning?”

51% of smartphone users download zero new apps every single month

One of comScore’s key takeaways from their 2017 app report said this: “More signs of having reached ‘peak app’ are emerging as interest in new apps begins to wane.”

It gets worse…

Within the demographic of 35+, only 1 in 4 individuals download new apps more often than they delete/uninstall old ones.

And if that’s not bad enough, 51% of smartphone users download 0 new apps every single month.

Fact #7: 80% of people who download an app never become active users

Because your church has an existing audience – your congregation – it’s very unlikely that your church would build an app and have nobody download it.

Despite the discouraging facts listed above, there’s a reasonable expectation that your church could be an outlier.

But just because a user downloads an app doesn’t mean they’ll become an active user. In fact, in the vast majority of cases, even though a person may download an app, they’ll never become an active user.7

75% of people download an app, open it once, and never come back

But wait there’s more:

Fortune8 reported that 75% of people download an app, open it once, and never come back.

What does this mean for you?

Don’t rely on app download statistics. Who cares if someone downloads an app if they never actually use it?

Because in most cases, data suggests that even though a person may download your app, it’s unlikely they’ll become an active user of it.

Fact #8: Push notifications are rarely enabled

If there’s one thing that mobile apps (even template-based ones) can do that your church website still cannot – it’s send push notifications.

Sure, websites can send push notifications on desktop nowadays, but it’s not the same thing.

And when it comes to template-based church apps, push notifications are the singular feature that exists that a template-based church website builder cannot replicate.

So, the question is this: is building a platform that costs your church $75-$200 each month worth it just for the push notifications?

Only 1 in 20 people ages 35+ say they always allow push notifications

Remember: In my experience, churches that succeed with digital media make informed decisions based on data – they don’t just follow the trends blindly.

What does the data tell us about push notifications in mobile apps?

Spoiler alert: it’s not great.

Less than 1 in 5 people say that they always agree to an app’s request to allow push notifications. In the 35+ age demographic, this number drops all the way to 1 in 20 people.9

Perhaps more importantly, 71% of Millennials say they get annoyed when they get too many app notifications. And more than 50% of those older than 35 years old agree.10

71% of Millennials say they are annoyed by too many app notifications

Bottom line: Push notifications are rarely enabled and the majority of people find them annoying when they receive too many

But that’s just part of the story…

Less than 1 in 5 people say that they always agree to an app’s request to allow push notifications

Fact #9 – You can send push notifications for free without an app

Simply put, I totally understand why your church would want to leverage the power of push notifications – even if only a few people in your church enable them!

When used properly, push notifications can be incredibly powerful.

But here’s the kicker: You don’t need to shell out $75-$200 each month for a church app to begin leveraging push notifications in your church. In fact, you can do it for free.

Every single one of the most popular communication apps in the world (Text, Email, Facebook, YouTube, Facebook Messenger, Instagram, Snapchat) allows you to send push notifications to your contacts and followers – for free.

You can send push notifications to your congregation for free using apps like Facebook and Instagram

And, as an added bonus, most people already have one or more of these apps installed on their mobile devices. They’re active users already!

Simply ask your followers and contacts to turn on push notifications for your specific account in the social/communication app of your choice – and your church can begin sending push notifications instantly! For free!

Bottom line:

Every major messaging and communication app that exists allows you to send push notifications to your followers and contacts for free. You don’t need a mobile app to send push notifications.

Fact #10: Your church app could be shut down at any moment

Late in 2017, Apple struck fear into the hearts of many churches and template-based app builders when it made the following announcement…

Going forward, according to Guideline 4.2.6, apps created using a “commercialized template or app generation service” would be banned from the app store.11

Not surprisingly, this generated a ton of backlash. Press releases were published. Church app companies scrambled to find solutions. The forums went crazy. People were freaking out – and rightfully so.

Thankfully, Apple heard the cries of its users and amended the rule. Guideline 4.2.6 now reads: “Apps created from a commercialized template or app generation service will be rejected unless they are submitted directly by the provider of the app’s content.”12

Still not great. But much, much better.

You might be wondering, how could Apple have the power to simply reject template-based apps?

Simply put: their house; their rules.

Now, I should note that I had phone conversations with a number of the large church app company providers, and they shared with me their plans to work around the new Apple App Store rules before the official revision was announced.

And this should go without saying: Church app providers love churches! They love their customers and want to serve them as best as they possibly can.

But when your platform is at the mercy of a monopoly-holding colossus like Apple, there’s only so much you can if they decide to one day change the rules.

Further Reading:

Free Bonus: Click here to download The Perfect Church Homepage Infographic – a complete visual breakdown of the essential elements that every church website homepage needs

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Brady Shearer

CEO of Pro Church Tools, Inc.

Well hey there! I'm Brady Shearer, the CEO of Pro Church Tools and the creator of Nucleus - a new kind of church website builder. I've been to every MLB ballpark. Sports and sitcoms are the way to my heart.